Friday, 16 August 2013

SETTLER GOVERNMENTS' FRUSTRATION OF AFRICAN ECONOMICS 1894 - 1951


 


1. This is a straightforward question requiring the candidate to outline the settler government’s policies that were designed to frustrate African economic activities as a way of forcing them to submit to the colonial capitalist system as labourers

2. A knowledge of various African activities is essential e.g. crop cultivation, pastoralism, mining, tool making, hunting and gathering, trade, tribute and raiding

3. It will be important to examine the settler government’s policies to hinder the above and other African economic activities

SOME OF THE KEY ISSUES TO CONSIDER INCLUDE THE FOLLOWING:

1. Expropriation of land- the Europeans started the process of grabbing the Africans’ land in 1890 when they occupied a part of Mashonaland. More land was forcibly taken away from the Africans in 1894 after the defeat of the Ndebele in the Anglo-Ndebele war of 1893-4. The land-grab was followed up by the creation of reserves for Africans in the Gwayi and Shangani areas that were arid and infertile. Given the fact land was the mode of production for the Africans whose most important economic activity was Agriculture it is not difficult to understand that the land-grabbing and subsequent creation of reserves severely frustrated and undermined the Africans’ way of life.

2. Confiscation of cattle- apart from pegging out huge farms for themselves on land that had been taken away from the Ndebele in 1894, the Europeans also went on to loot large herds of the Ndebele cattle. Pastoralism was also an important economic activity and cattle were significant as a form of wealth. They were used to pay the bride-price, for trade, for meat and milk as well as for ritual purposes. The expropriation of large herds of African cattle had negative results for the Africans leaving many of them poorer and unable to live a self-sufficient life. Many were ultimately forced to sell their labour rather cheaply to the Europeans on their farms and mines in order to survive.

3. Forced labour- the Europeans often resorted to forcing Africans to work for them on their farms and mines. Such measures removed Africans from their independent and traditional economic pursuits of agriculture and pastoralism and prevented them from being self-reliant. The practice of forced labour was extremely brutal to the point that it became a major African grievance leading up to the first Ndebele-Shona uprising popularly known as the First Chimurenga/Umvukela of 1896-7

4. Taxation- different kinds of taxes were imposed on the Africans by the settler governments in a clear attempt to uproot them from their traditional agricultural and pastoral way of life and get them to participate in the money-based colonial and capitalist economy as manual labourers. There was a Hut Tax, a Poll Tax and even a cattle tax among others and all these had to be paid in cash in order to induce the Africans to take up paid employment on the European farms, mines and manufacturing industries.

5. Discriminatory and oppressive laws- perhaps the best known was the Land Apportionment Act first passed in 1930 and amended so many times afterwards. This divided the country’s land into African and European areas. Europeans were given 48 million acres in the prime farming regions that were closest to transport and telecommunications infrastructure while over one million Africans were allocated only 21 million acres of mostly arid and barren land far removed from the markets and transport and telecommunications facilities. Overcrowding and a severe deterioration in African agriculture quickly followed and the settler government attempted to redress the consequent environmental degradation by passing the equally discriminatory and oppressive Native Land Husbandry Act in 1951. This law further frustrated and undermined African economic activity and way of life by imposing limits on land owned, cattle owned as well as prohibiting tree cutting which was a source of firewood for rural energy requirements. The Maize Control Act discriminated against African farmers causing their produce to be classified as inferior to that of the Europeans and therefore attracting a lower purchase price. The Masters and Servants Act as well as the Industrial Conciliation Act were some of the oppressive pieces of legislation that prevented African workers from effectively organizing themselves in trade unions that could negotiate with employers for higher wages and better working conditions.

6. Having outlined and discussed the measures stated above, it will remain for the candidate to conclude that the combination of all those measures succeeded in frustrating and progressively destroying African economic activities